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Express it Forward

April 15, 2012 in Art Blog, Art Practice, Just because

Express it Forward, brainchild of Ula Einstein is a philosophy and practice designed to activate your creativity-in-motion. In this episode we discuss perfectionism. Perfectionism, that sneaky bugger, chips away at our ideas. Perfectionism has no room for experimenting, playing, or process… Perfectionism is not a Standard — Perfectionism is an Obstacle!

Beyond The Comfort Zone

Stop Holding Your Breath

Good job Ula, Love what you are doing!

-Mariestella

Magnitude 7

April 6, 2012 in Art Blog, Art competition, Artist Submissions

8th Annual MAGNITUDE 7

Deadline for Entry: April 18, 2012

Every year Manifest calls for little works of art from around the world.
Each exhibit brings in hundreds of powerful yet diminutive masterpieces for our jury to consider. Inevitably we end up with a gallery full of diverse, compelling, and exquisite little gems. Manifest’s patrons eagerly await the Magnitude SEVEN event each year. So we are always excited to offer this call to artists to submit works no larger than seven inches in any dimension (any proportion). Standard presentation devices like mats and frames that are not considered part of the work of art are not limited by the 7″ criteria. 


Eligibility: Magnitude 7 is open to everyone. Professionals as well as students are encouraged to enter. The only limitation is that entries must represent original works of art that are 7″ or smaller.

Media: Open to any and all traditional and non-traditional genre and media, including mixed media. The only limiting factor is size. There is no other thematic guideline.

Jury and Curator: Manifest’s selection process involves a complex two-part system. This exhibit will be juried by a 5-9 member panel of professional and academic advisors with a broad range of expertise. The jury will then pass along their recommendations to the exhibit curator who will make the final selections from the jury-approved pool.

Catalog: Manifest will produce a full-color catalog documenting the work selected for exhibit. Each exhibiting artist will receive one free copy of the catalog. Artists will receive their copy either in person when picking up work after the exhbit, or with the return shipment of their artwork. Additional copies can be purchased via the online bookstore. For examples of past catalogs visit Manifest Press.

Delivery and Return of Work: All work accepted for the exhibition must arrive ready to install. Works not gallery-ready, or not exhibiting good craftsmanship, may be omitted from the exhibit. Accepted work that differs significantly from the entry images or suffers from poor presentation, will be disqualified. Please note that professional-level presentation is a must. Work may be hand delivered or shipped. Shipped works must be sent in an easily reusable container/packaging with return shipping prepaid, and include the return shipping label with the work. Works will be returned in the same manner as delivered or via UPS/USPS. All work must arrive at Manifest by the specified date (see calendar below). Accepted work will remain on display for the duration of the exhibition. Works not claimed within 30 days of the end of the exhibit will become the property of Manifest. The artists are responsible for all shipping costs.


Calendar:

April 18April 30May 11May 26

June 1

June 29

June 30 – July 6

July 5

Deadline for receipt of entriesNotifications sent by email to all entrants sometime this week.Hi-res images needed for catalog and PRArtwork due to Manifest by this date

Opening reception

Final Day of Exhibition

Pick-up hand-delivered work

Schedule shipped artwork for pickup (arranged by artist)

 

Insurance: Works will be insured while on gallery premises. Insurance covers theft, vandalism, damage caused by gallery patrons or staff (in accordance with insurance policy). PLEASE NOTE: Insurance does not cover damage caused during shipping due to any reason, including mishandling by carrier or failure of packaging to protect works in transit. Also not covered is damage caused to work by failure of the work itself, its mounting systems installed by the artist, or disintegration/degradation due to the nature/quality of materials or craftsmanship.

Entry Fee: Each work submitted must be accompanied by a $10 non-refundable entry fee. Number of entries is unlimited. Entry fee must be paid by U.S. check or U.S. or International money order made payable to MANIFEST, or by credit card via PayPal. (If paying by PayPal PLEASE use the paypal link provided on the page that follows the submission of the online entry form.) Detail images may be included at no additional cost, but should only be included if necessary for understanding the nature or quality of the artwork. For more than one entry fee paid by PayPal PLEASE remember to update quantity when doing so on the PayPal site.

How many works should I submit?
The average number of works submitted to typical Manifest calls is 3. Some artists like to submit several more, especially if they have a couple different bodies of work which they’d like our jury to consider, or if they have a suite of works that are interrelated. While we have absolutely no minimum number required (other than one), nor do we give an advantage to those who submit more, it is helpful to have a few options to select from at the curatorial stage. And we do routinely accept pairs or sets of work by artists once they are determined to be a finalist through our blind jury system.

Sale of Work: All work, unless indicated as not for sale (NFS), will be available for sale during exhibit. Manifest Gallery will retain a commission of 30% on all artwork sold during the exhibition.

Submission Images: In an effort to conserve resources Manifest accepts only digital images/files for consideration. See specifications below. The Gallery will retain the submitted images of accepted artwork and reserves the right to use the images in publications and gallery publicity. CD’s of works not selected will only be returned if accompanied by a SASE.

 

View the rest of the artists call 

Open Call!

March 13, 2012 in Art Blog, Art competition, Artist Submissions, Resources

Open Call!
Field Projects Show #4 curated by David C. Terry

Field Projects is pleased to announce our first open call exhibition; emerging and mid-career artists are invited to submit their work for consideration in our April exhibition, Show #4. Submissions will be viewed and selected for Show #4 by David C. Terry, Senior Program Officer and Curator at the New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA). All of the submissions we receive will be considered not only for Show #4 but also for our upcoming exhibition calendar.

Field Projects is an NYC-based project space committed to opening the field and exhibition opportunities to other working artists. All of the submissions we receive will be considered not only for Show #4 but also for our upcoming exhibition calendar. As a growing space, this is a fantastic time to submit your work. We are looking for new talent, ideas and practices in the contemporary art field.

About the Curator
David C. Terry is the Senior Program Officer/Curator in the Programs and Awards Department, and manager of the Fellowship and Curatorial Programs at the New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA). Mr. Terry is a working artist, curator, juror, and a panelist for the New York State Council on the Arts, Bronx Council on the Arts, Westchester Biennale, the Alexander Rutsch Award in Painting, and the Woodstock Byrdcliffe Artist in Residence Program.

Terry was recently selected as a resident in the Elizabeth Foundation’s Residency Grant for Arts Workers in 2011 but also been the recipient of awards including AIM at The Bronx Museum; BRIO, Bronx Council on the Arts; The Puffin Foundation; New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in Sculpture, and the Arts and Business Council’s Arts Leadership Institute Award.

Eligibility & Terms
-Artists working in all mediums are welcome to apply.
-All artwork submitted must be ready to hang.
-Artists living outside NYC are also welcome to apply, however you will be responsible for artwork shipping costs.
-Artists working in new media, film, or video- you will be required to use your own equipment for exhibitions.

Submission Fee
$25

Deadline
Friday April 6, 2012, 11:59 PM !!
(Please note, due to time limitations there will be no extensions)

About Show #4
-Selected artists will be notified the week of April 9th.
-All artwork must arrive at Field Projects by Monday April 23rd
-Show #4 opens on Thursday April 26th and will run through Sunday May 6th

to apply go to the Field Project’s website.

Call For Applications: Summer 2012 Curatorial Intensive

March 13, 2012 in Art Blog, Art competition, Art Notes

CALL FOR APPLICATIONS:
New York Summer 2012: Contemporary Curatorial Practice

Program Dates:
July 8-17, 2012

Application Deadline: April 6
Program Dates: July 8–17

Recognizing there are few opportunities for professionals to receive practical training and guidance while also holding down a job, the Curatorial Intensive is targeted toward self-motivated individuals—working independently or in institutions—who would benefit from a week of intensive conversations around the issues and questions that regularly arise for curators. These range from the pragmatics of developing an exhibition and building working relationships with artists to the theoretical aspects of understanding how to turn a concept into a project and effectively communicate ideas.

Focusing on new models for curating and exhibition development, ICI’s annual summer Curatorial Intensive offers curators the opportunity to meet colleagues from around the world and share ideas on how to push the parameters of their practice.

Teachers and advisors include New York-based independent curator Cecilia Alemani; Matthew Higgs, Director and Chief Curator, White Columns, New York; and Nancy Spector, Deputy Director and Chief Curator, Guggenheim Foundation, New York.

Application Guidelines
All applications must include a 500-word description of a program idea that the applicant would like help in developing. This description should outline the proposal concept and any artists that the applicant is considering. Also required are a current resume; a 500-1,000-word letter of intent; and a 500-word text that describes a recent exhibition that has made an impact on the applicant.

Fees and Scholarships
The program fee is 1,900 USD. Participants are responsible for covering travel and accommodation expenses. ICI also offers generous scholarship packages, subsidizing or eliminating the program fees and travel expenses of four participants.

For more information, visit ICI’s website or contact Education & Public Programs Manager Chelsea Haines at chelsea@curatorsintl.org.

Vulner-abilities

February 28, 2012 in Art Blog, Art Practice

Dear GalleryArtists,

I am re-visiting this topic, I think it’s an important consideration into the art practice:

Today let’s talk about a subject that is seldom mentioned in art.. That is (as the title of this post suggests) vulnerability. The type of state that occurs without the baggage of psychological misconduct and the venerable reputation of weakness, but as the conduit of compelling visual art.

I believe slowing yourself to the point of, whether emotional or physical, vulnerability (by letting go of control) might be your greatest ally in making great art. Take for example the colossal work of the hyper realist sculpture Ron Mueck or the distressing uncomfortable works of Robert Gober or the master manipulator of emotions that is Bill Viola video work.
What these works have in common is a tapped resource of visual and or implied human emotion. Not to mention the emotional coercion that occurs while viewing these master-pieces of art as intended by the artists. This coercion occurs by exploiting our better nature when we blindly accept to go along the artificially constructed emotional ride.

On the making of art being vulnerable is synonymous to being open

On the making of art being vulnerable is synonymous to being open, open to the truth, open to possibilities… Open to being in a vulnerable state actually requires courage, and while that might sound like an oxymoron is its true. Additionally there is a certain amount of freedom that comes with it, because you are in fact letting go of the grip of control, you are free to expose the hidden and express with depth.

Conversely there are times that one can go too far in this process, creating painfully awkward pieces that are in fact so exposing to the point of extreme intimacy that can provide with a mere glance a piercingly uncomfortable stomach pain (you know what I’m talking about, that feeling at the pit of your stomach when you’ve seen too much! ;) .

It is as if we may have gotten a glimpse of the very core of the subject/object’s humanity; a bit too close for comfort and a little to far from our human safety net that is intellectual rationalization. The very guard that provides us long lists of excellent reasons to be overzealous and cautious. Providing us distance and a well -hermetically sealed- dose of unemotional detachment and antiseptically clean thoughts of art theory – and.. breathe in.

Now, I can hear some of you (all the way here!) letting me know how your intention is to produce art that is uncomfortable so as to make your audience confront their own mortality, humanity, etc.   In fact, contemporary art has if not but embraced the idea that art IS meant to create such feelings and has a great deal of examples in this tradition as well as flock of practitioners who do express this train of thought with great finness. In fact, for a great deal of people contemporary art is meant to do just that,  put the viewer in a confrontational space, push them to their comfort limit, so they can be intellectually freed from their own expectations and assumptions.

-Agreed, you are the exception to the aforementioned observation so just simply ignore my too-far/balancing point and continue on.-

For the rest of us searching to create meaningful and thoughtful art that is not necessarily upfront in confrontation, but tries to deal with the more subtle and formal issues in art;  it is balance!- therein lies the solution to this vulnerability issue. To achieve enough of it for effect but retain shall I say, dignity (smile) is a challenge I propose today.

Truly yours,
Mariestella

Studio Envy – a new series

October 31, 2011 in Art Blog, Art Practice, Studio Envy

Dear Gallery Artists,

Today I begin the week with what I promised a few posts back: to bring fabulous artist studios as a series. Here it is, the first Studio Envy visit:

Into the fabulous studio of Brooklyn based visual artist:

Carol Salmanson

On my last visit to NYC I stopped by her studio and took some pictures to share with you. The location is Bushwick, Brooklyn in a building dedicated now to artists studios.
I visited her quite a few years back on that same building, on a different floor.. Man, how things have changed!
It’s always interesting how a neighborhood and building can develop in just a few years, now this area of Bushwick has transformed into art-trendy area.
Even the coffee shop across the street called “Swallow” is getting into the action.

As I stepped into her floor, the hallways remind you that you are amidst an artistic haven. Every which way there are signs of art life present.

As she opened the enormous double doors the studio is spacious and bright (as a great studio space should be ;)  Her work did not disappoint, I was entering a space full of creative energy, complete with work in progress, experiments and finished hung work -for the occasional drop-by-visitor like myself.

Carol Salmanson's studio

Carol Salmanson's studio

Carol Salmanson's studio - her materials - LED lights

Carol Salmanson’s artwork is not only tech-savy as good light art should be,  but it is beautiful, poetic, ever-changing.
In her work, color is an important protagonist as are the lights themselves. On her public art pieces, during daytime, color shifts and changes with reflective colorful industrial-type materials, whether it’s metal, or a variety of reflective films and adhesive tapes. At night, the reflection subsides to a well orchestrated symphony of LED lights; it is dynamic and visually tantalizing as it changes the landscape it’s contains.

In her own words:

My work is about the intricacies of human interaction, which I learned to carefully observe in order to compensate for a hereditary hearing problem. Like theater at its best, when a play captures the hidden structure of those intricacies and is no longer about the words, the work explores the energy embedded in subconscious perceptions and calculations, the things you see and know without realizing it. Information intersects with emotions to create a specific kind of knowledge that is nonverbal, precise, and intense.

Her new work explores the senses in a totally different way, the new light work is delicate, intimate, organic and etherial.
Believe me, photographs (especially mine) do NOT do it justice!
If you can, see them in person.

Until then, enjoy!

In my opinion, her masterpiece.

In my opinion, her masterpiece. (detail)

To learn more about Carol Salmanson and her work visit her website at: carolsalmanson.com

Yours truly,
Mariestella

Show me yours and I’ll show you my…

September 30, 2011 in Art Blog, Art Practice

STUDIO!! Geez guys!… ;)

Seriously though, I’m moving my studio into a new space (in my house) and that got me thinking about how much I loove seeing other studios.  I think it’s like a gateway into others’ creative process, right?
In that spirit, I have decided to find great studios to post in the future for your viewing pleasure. So stay tuned for that.

A good adequate space is not enough, finding a great space to make art increases the chance of you getting comfortable enough to create at your best.

In the mean time here is my list for finding a good studio space.

List of requirements for a good studio (and why I moved):

  1. Ample square footage
  2. Good lighting, preferably natural (I’m working on this.. check out my light towers with wheels!)
  3. Good wall space
  4. Ceiling height
  5. Spacious storage
  6. Computer space (you need this for the business part of your art practice)
  7. Privacy (It’ is sooo important.)
  8. Ample floor space (I am lining mine with foam tiles, it’s comfortable and protects the floor.)
  9. Secure
  10. Don’t forget your materials… ;)

Optional

  1. If you are lucky, within a space that houses other artist’s studios..
  2. A place with a view

Here is a sampling of my work-in-progress of a new studio.. (now, it’s your turn.)
Enjoy!

Art: the practice… amen.

September 2, 2011 in Art Blog

If you are wondering, you’ll be reading a lot on this subject since I am literally writing as I make art alternating between the two… Soo, the art practice questions always arise.. -What yo-gonna-do.

“Contemporary art is the religion of the agnostic”

I’ve read -more than once- that art is the religion of the atheist and agnostic. The art following ritual that could look like a pilgrimage to the weekly gallery openings, if you live in a large city, but if you are like me you go on a monthly basis (sigh) to offer your art devotion. One could argue that it is indeed a type of art-faith, the love of the devoted and faithful, looking for answers or maybe interesting questions to consider in your own life raised by a good piece of art. -I include the most banal artwork in here as well (have you been to an art fair lately?). All is to be considered.

I would like to propose that this art devotion is also a type of ritual for those who are not agnostic but consider themselves as spiritual. As it is also a poignant way to express your spirituality. Leaving the obviously religious art aside (sorry).

OK. At this point some of you may even feel uncomfortable (or offended?) at the mere insinuation of a spiritual element. So, I suggest, to choose another word. Words like, a greater knowing, or even the collective or common consciousness. The latter eludes to the fact that art appears (although this is not exclusive to art making) to have a certain amount of rhythm or that has cyclical lifespan. Have you noticed that a lot of art ideas come through at the same time as if artists from around the world are thinking mysteriously of the same type of things, or doing the same types of techniques? I’ve always been fascinated about this phenomena. It’s like if you have a good idea you better get on it and produce it because someone at the next town might just be doing the same thing you are.. and no you’ve never met or know the same people. Of course we can talk about the globalization/homogenization of our cultures and societies. But this article is not about that..

What I am referring to is the art or art practice that is about self discovery grounded in a spiritual understanding. That inner voice in which you choose, if you listen, to let it be outwardly expressed and heard may be the greatest power that you have as an artist. Granted, it is not an easy task.. listening. Even though this idea may or may not be a public subject it is something that drives my own search for visual expression.

And so it goes.. my search to listen and translate.

What drives you to create?